Pascal Savy - Dislocations (2018)
Artist: Pascal Savy
Title: Dislocations
Year Of Release: 2018
Label: Experimedia – EXP202
Genre: Ambient, Experimental
Quality: lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 41:18
Total Size: 179 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
TracklistTitle: Dislocations
Year Of Release: 2018
Label: Experimedia – EXP202
Genre: Ambient, Experimental
Quality: lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 41:18
Total Size: 179 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
1. The Slow Cancellation Of The Future (07:26)
2. Shadows Out Of Time (05:33)
3. Echoes Of A Black Hole Eating A Star (06:55)
4. Retrograde Amnesia (06:39)
5. Night More Viscous Than The Dawn (04:37)
6. Allow The Light (10:08)
Experimedia is pleased to present ‘Dislocations’ – an ambitious set of new compositions from the London-based French drone auteur Pascal Savy. These are the artist’s first proper recordings to come to light since the release of ‘Adrift’ via Eilean Rec. in 2014; but while ‘Dislocations’ seems to share a similar aesthetic to that album at first glance, Savy has fallen ever further down the rabbit hole in the intervening years.
Whereas our last offering – Matthias Urban’s ‘Passagen’ – focused on the expressive potentialities presented through rigorous discipline and process, ‘Dislocations’ explores a more reactive and emotionally charged terrain.
Heavily influenced by the writings of Mark Fisher – specifically those found in ‘Ghosts of My Life,’ wherein Fisher lays out his notion of “the slow cancellation of the future” – the production of ‘Dislocations’ began as a pessimistic reflection on the subtle violence and disembodied forces of what Fisher terms “capitalist realism.” Over time, the project would evolve to become more intimate in scope, providing a lens through which Savy could begin to deconstruct and integrate his own feelings of personal dislocation. Ultimately, however, ‘Dislocations’ would become the means through which he would find himself reconnecting with his art, his community, and sense of hope for the future.
What the listener receives from this process is a set of incredibly evocative recordings that occupies a rarefied space in the hinterland that falls between ambient, drone, and noise aesthetics. At times sounding like a recovered archive of lost transmissions from the front lines of late-period capitalism’s collapse, ‘Dislocations’ exists as a shifting mass of knotted low-end, grayscale reverberations, and pale shades of melody.